International observers say they've heard the heavy weapons being fired and seen the craters in the aftermath.
After financial firms like Goldman Sachs left the aluminum storage business, surcharges paid by millions of average consumers have fallen steeply.
The governor's subsidy for an evangelical anti-gay group exemplifies his social conservatism — and the perils it may present in a general election.
The move would have sent 350,000 Somalis back to their war-ravaged country.
Women don't vote based on gender, so Hillary Clinton and Carly Fiorina need to stick to policy.
The Pentagon chief and and NATO military commander agree: Rebel forces are gearing up for a new offensive.
Ed Miliband could give Britain its first self-identified Jewish leader if his party wins Thursday. But some British Jews aren't happy about it.
The U.S. is launching its train-and-equip program for moderate Syrian rebels. But there may be none to be found.
As President Xi Jinping prepares for Friday's visit to Russia, a new online video shows ordinary Chinese citizens hailing two "very strong" leaders.
The president will tout free trade at a company that built an empire on offshore factory outsourcing.
Liberia is leaving behind the Ebola outbreak, but the social, political and economic challenges are just beginning for the West African nation.
Thousands have fled violence amid protests against President Pierre Nkurunziza's plans to seek an unconstitutional third term.
Russian and Turkish military officials also conducted joint tests of an air defense system, a Russian arms company representative said.
Imperial Tobacco, the fourth largest tobacco company in the world, is blaming its decline in cigarette sales in part on the Islamic State group.
The exercise comes amid heightened regional tensions with Russia.
Saudi Arabia announced the possibility of a humanitarian ceasefire in Yemen, as long as Iran and the Houthi rebels agree to it.
The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New York said Thursday that the surveillance program was outside of what U.S. Congress authorized in the Patriot Act.
Exhausted by war and foreign intervention, some of Syria’s first revolutionaries now support the brutal dictator they once fought.
A man said his vehicle's plate was scanned twice, though neither he nor the vehicle were targets of an investigation.
A state House panel OKs a bill that would cut sentences for minor offenses in a state with some of the toughest anti-pot laws in the nation.
Intelligence officials say as many as 1 in 6 Europeans joining ISIS are converts to Islam from non-Muslim households.
Christine Mau made history as the first U.S. woman pilot to take the controls of an F-35 Lightning II fighter jet.
"Pay to play" rules bar bond work for campaign contributors, yet the governor delivered bond deals to his finance industry donors.
The Islamic State group hasn't organized an attack on U.S. soil yet, but it "will strike the West if and when it can," officials say.
Barack Obama congratulated the West African nation on “the strength of Nigeria’s commitment to democratic principles.”
State Senate Democrats questioned whether the proposal is constitutional.
There are about 1.6 million Muslims living in Spain, representing about 3 percent of the population. Many hail from nearby Morocco, Algeria or Tunisia.
A tsunami warning, which was lifted about an hour later, was issued for the region by the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center.
A Saudi Arabia-led coalition has been conducting airstrikes against Iran-allied Houthi rebels since late March, affecting millions of people.
Li Keqiang's remarks show frustrations at the difficulties of adjusting economic policy.